12/22/17 Implosion of Cather and Pound Halls at the University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Both 13 story buildings were imploded at exactly 9am and fell onto the grounds formerly containing the Cather/Pound/Neihardt Dining Hall.

published:22 Dec 2017

views:2994

The University of Nebraska-Lincoln imploded their Cather and Pound dorm buildings at 9am on December 22nd, 2017. The connected dining hall between the twin buildings was torn down in October and its open space provided a prime spot for the dorms to fall. The University hopes to build more dorm buildings to replace the ones torn down, but for now will create a temporary green space once the rubble is removed. For more information on the demolition and on the history of Cather and Pound, visit the links below.
https://housing.unl.edu/cather-pound-demolition
https://unlincoln.exposure.co/historic-towers
This video was recorded on an iPad Pro and belongs to the creator of this channel.

published:22 Dec 2017

views:1925

NEBCO, Inc. has been part of Nebraska and the regions history for over a century. NEBCO traces its roots to Abel Construction Company, founded in 1908 by George P. Abel, Sr. Today, NEBCO is a third generation, family-owned and operated business. With over 1,000 employees, NEBCO has grown to become one of Nebraskas largest privately owned firms.
NEBCOs operations span the state of Nebraska and supply the construction industry with the materials needed to construct buildings, streets and highways. The companys business interests also include mining, highway and road construction, finance, real estate recreation development, agriculture, transportation, railroading and warehousing.
As Nebraska has grown in the last century, so has NEBCO, building Nebraska into areas of concrete and construction materials, real estate, recreation, and philanthropy.
http://www.nebcoinc.com
http://www.Abelfoundation.org
http://www.concreteindustries.com
http://www.christensenconcrete.com
http://www.constructorslincoln.com/
http://www.balanceisgood.com/
http://www.kearneycreteandblock.com/
http://www.readymixedconcrete.com/
http://www.kerfordlimestone.com/
http://www.nebcorealtygroup.com/
http://www.nebcointermodal.com/
http://www.nebraskaash.com/
http://www.olbrailway.com/
http://www.overlandsandandgravel.com/
http://www.plainspozzolanic.com/
http://www.quarryoaks.com
http://www.readymixedconcrete.com/
http://www.reimerskaufman.com/
http://www.saltdogs.com/
http://www.trafconinc.com/
http://www.umixproducts.com/
http://www.universalinland.com/
http://www.watkinsconcreteblock.com/
http://www.westernsandandgravel.com/

Discover the scenic side of life at http://Ydstoti.com - MeadvilleGhost Town We were excited to see a ghost town listed near our backroads route in north central Nebraska. Our AAA map listed it under "Historic." The map showed the ghost town of Meadville located on the Niobrara River, but no road to the north; we decided to embark on a bit of a side-trip adventure anyway. We're always up for that! After a few miles of gravel road and some beautiful fall foliage, we crossed a brand new bridge -- which was a pleasant surprise since our map didn't show that detail.
About a half mile further, we located the "historic ghost town." The General Store is open daily at noon. We were there mid-morning so there was no one around. Meadville's main building is the Post Office/General Store which was restored 15 years ago. There are three other buildings on the property -- a storage building, a house that appears to have been moved in, and an authentic log cabin that seems to be original to the town.
A bit disappointing, but we didn't talk to anyone about the history so perhaps there is more than meets the eye or some grand plans in the works. It did look as though we missed quite a party -- there were beer bottles and bags -- and more bags -- of beer cans. Perhaps that is their fundraising method for future improvements!
For this backroads trip, however, we have to say it was not worth the trip. The only spirits we found evidence of are those that come in a brown bottle!

On our road trip in 2014, we had the pleasure of driving through the quaint little town of Red Cloud, Nebraska. The brick road through the downtown area was amazing, as well as the architecture of the buildings. We stopped for a bite of breakfast pizza while there! Residents of Red Cloud, you live in a beautiful place. To see thousands of pictures, more videos and tons of RV info, visit http://RVRoadTrip.us and http://JerryandCynthia.com

Nebraska

Nebraskai/nəˈbræskə/ is a state that lies in both the Great Plains and the Midwestern United States. Its state capital is Lincoln. Its largest city is Omaha, which is on the Missouri River. The state is crossed by many historic trails and was explored by the Lewis and Clark Expedition. The California Gold Rush brought the first large numbers of non-indigenous settlers to the area. Nebraska was admitted as the 37th state of the United States in 1867. The climate has wide variations between winter and summer temperatures, and violent thunderstorms and tornadoes are common. The state is characterized by treeless prairie, which is ideal for cattle-grazing. It is a major producer of beef, as well as pork, corn, and soybeans. The largest ancestry group claimed by Nebraskans is German American. The state also has the largest per capita population of Czech Americans among U.S. states.

Etymology

Nebraska's name is derived from transliteration of the archaic Otoe words Ñí Brásge, pronounced [ɲĩbɾasꜜkɛ] (contemporary Otoe Ñí Bráhge), or the OmahaNí Btháska, pronounced [nĩbɫᶞasꜜka], meaning "flat water", after the Platte River that flows through the state.

Height

Height is the measure of vertical distance, but has two meanings in common use. It can either indicate how "tall" something is, or how "high up" it is. For example "The height of the building is 50m" or "The height of the airplane is 10,000m". When used to describe how high something like an airplane or mountain peak is from sea level, height is more often called altitude. Height is measured along the vertical (y) axis between a specified point and another .

Etymology

English high is derived from Old English hēah, ultimately from Proto-Germanic *xauxa-z, from a PIE base *keuk-. The derived noun height, also the obsolete forms heighth and highth, is from Old English híehþo, later héahþu, as it were from Proto-Germanic *xaux-iþa.

In mathematics

In elementary models of space, height may indicate the third dimension, the other two being length and width. Height is normal to the plane formed by the length and width.

Height is also used as a name for some more abstract definitions. These include:

The university was chartered by the legislature in 1869 as a land-grant university under the 1862 Morrill Act, two years after Nebraska's statehood into the United States. Around the turn of the 20th century, the university began to expand significantly, hiring professors from eastern schools to teach in the newly organized professional colleges while also producing groundbreaking research in agricultural sciences. The "Nebraska method" of ecological study developed here during this time, which pioneered grassland ecology and laid the foundation for research in theoretical ecology for the rest of the 20th century. The university is organized into eight colleges, located on two campuses in Lincoln with over 100 classroom buildings and research facilities.

Lincoln was founded as the village of Lancaster on the wild salt flats of what was to become Lancaster County. A short time later, Lancaster was renamed Lincoln and became Nebraska's capital.

Sometimes referred to as the "Star City", many of Lincoln's primary employers fall within the service and manufacturing industries, including a growing high tech sector. The city is the home of the University of Nebraska, has an unemployment rate of 2.2% (December 2015, preliminary) and has the second tallest capitol building in the United States.

History

Pioneer Lincoln

Prior to the expansion westward of settlers, the prairie was covered with buffalo grass. Plains Indians, descendants of indigenous peoples who occupied the area for thousands of years, lived in and hunted along Salt Creek. The Pawnee, which included four tribes, lived in villages along the Platte River. The Great Sioux Nation, including the Ihanktowan-Ihanktowana and the Lakota located to the north and west, used Nebraska as a hunting and skirmish ground, although they did not have any long-term settlements in the state. An occasional buffalo could still be seen in the plat of Lincoln in the 1860s.

Red Cloud

Red Cloud (Lakota: Maȟpíya Lúta) (1822– December 10, 1909) was an important leader of the Oglala Lakota. He led from 1868 to 1909. One of the most capable Native American opponents the United States Army faced, he led a successful campaign in 1866–1868 known as Red Cloud's War over control of the Powder River Country in northeastern Wyoming and southern Montana. The largest action of the war, the Fetterman Fight (with 81 men killed on the U.S. side), was the worst military defeat suffered by the U.S. on the Great Plains until the Battle of the Little Bighorn ten years later.

After signing the Treaty of Fort Laramie (1868), Red Cloud led his people in the important transition to reservation life. Some of his US opponents mistakenly thought of him as overall leader of the Sioux (Dakota, Lakota, and Nakota). The large tribe had several major divisions and was highly decentralized. Bands among the Oglala and other divisions operated independently, even though some individual leaders, such as Red Cloud, were renowned as warriors and highly respected as leaders.

12/22/17 Implosion of Cather and Pound Halls at the University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Both 13 story buildings were imploded at exactly 9am and fell onto the grounds formerly containing the Cather/Pound/Neihardt Dining Hall.

2:20

University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Cather & Pound Demolition

University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Cather & Pound Demolition

University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Cather & Pound Demolition

The University of Nebraska-Lincoln imploded their Cather and Pound dorm buildings at 9am on December 22nd, 2017. The connected dining hall between the twin buildings was torn down in October and its open space provided a prime spot for the dorms to fall. The University hopes to build more dorm buildings to replace the ones torn down, but for now will create a temporary green space once the rubble is removed. For more information on the demolition and on the history of Cather and Pound, visit the links below.
https://housing.unl.edu/cather-pound-demolition
https://unlincoln.exposure.co/historic-towers
This video was recorded on an iPad Pro and belongs to the creator of this channel.

9:26

NEBCO Inc. - Building Nebraska

NEBCO Inc. - Building Nebraska

NEBCO Inc. - Building Nebraska

NEBCO, Inc. has been part of Nebraska and the regions history for over a century. NEBCO traces its roots to Abel Construction Company, founded in 1908 by George P. Abel, Sr. Today, NEBCO is a third generation, family-owned and operated business. With over 1,000 employees, NEBCO has grown to become one of Nebraskas largest privately owned firms.
NEBCOs operations span the state of Nebraska and supply the construction industry with the materials needed to construct buildings, streets and highways. The companys business interests also include mining, highway and road construction, finance, real estate recreation development, agriculture, transportation, railroading and warehousing.
As Nebraska has grown in the last century, so has NEBCO, building Nebraska into areas of concrete and construction materials, real estate, recreation, and philanthropy.
http://www.nebcoinc.com
http://www.Abelfoundation.org
http://www.concreteindustries.com
http://www.christensenconcrete.com
http://www.constructorslincoln.com/
http://www.balanceisgood.com/
http://www.kearneycreteandblock.com/
http://www.readymixedconcrete.com/
http://www.kerfordlimestone.com/
http://www.nebcorealtygroup.com/
http://www.nebcointermodal.com/
http://www.nebraskaash.com/
http://www.olbrailway.com/
http://www.overlandsandandgravel.com/
http://www.plainspozzolanic.com/
http://www.quarryoaks.com
http://www.readymixedconcrete.com/
http://www.reimerskaufman.com/
http://www.saltdogs.com/
http://www.trafconinc.com/
http://www.umixproducts.com/
http://www.universalinland.com/
http://www.watkinsconcreteblock.com/
http://www.westernsandandgravel.com/

Historic Bale Buildings of Nebraska

Meadville A Nebraska Ghost Town

Discover the scenic side of life at http://Ydstoti.com - MeadvilleGhost Town We were excited to see a ghost town listed near our backroads route in north central Nebraska. Our AAA map listed it under "Historic." The map showed the ghost town of Meadville located on the Niobrara River, but no road to the north; we decided to embark on a bit of a side-trip adventure anyway. We're always up for that! After a few miles of gravel road and some beautiful fall foliage, we crossed a brand new bridge -- which was a pleasant surprise since our map didn't show that detail.
About a half mile further, we located the "historic ghost town." The General Store is open daily at noon. We were there mid-morning so there was no one around. Meadville's main building is the Post Office/General Store which was restored 15 years ago. There are three other buildings on the property -- a storage building, a house that appears to have been moved in, and an authentic log cabin that seems to be original to the town.
A bit disappointing, but we didn't talk to anyone about the history so perhaps there is more than meets the eye or some grand plans in the works. It did look as though we missed quite a party -- there were beer bottles and bags -- and more bags -- of beer cans. Perhaps that is their fundraising method for future improvements!
For this backroads trip, however, we have to say it was not worth the trip. The only spirits we found evidence of are those that come in a brown bottle!

A Drive Through Red Cloud, Nebraska

On our road trip in 2014, we had the pleasure of driving through the quaint little town of Red Cloud, Nebraska. The brick road through the downtown area was amazing, as well as the architecture of the buildings. We stopped for a bite of breakfast pizza while there! Residents of Red Cloud, you live in a beautiful place. To see thousands of pictures, more videos and tons of RV info, visit http://RVRoadTrip.us and http://JerryandCynthia.com

100 years of American industrial development included in one man's collection spread out in over 20 exhibit buildings. Planes, cars, appliances, collections, village buildings and their content, its all here. Come and enjoy.

10:54

DAY OF THE TWINS - Tornado terror in Nebraska

DAY OF THE TWINS - Tornado terror in Nebraska

DAY OF THE TWINS - Tornado terror in Nebraska

The Pilger Twin EF-4 tornadoes, The Wayne County line satellite and birth of the Wakefield EF-4 tornado. Full story w/ radar and commentary. To license HD tornado video contact hankschyma@yahoo.com
THE EVENT: June 16, 2014
Early this afternoon the Storm Prediction Center was monitoring a volatile atmosphere over Nebraska. By 2:34 PM satellite imagery revealed a lone thunderstorm developing in Boone, Platte and Madison counties and By 4PM a large damaging tornado was being reported near the town of Stanton. Base velocity started revealing a second area of powerful rotation within the storm. The Stanton tornado would earn an EF-4 rating before dissipating Near highway 57 and 275.
When I arrived at the scene, another tornado had developed southwest of Pilger, NE and strengthened to EF-4 status while striking the small town killing 2 people and critically injuring around 20 others. During this time a 2nd tornado was developing to the southeast. This tornado would become the eastern twin and would also strengthen to an EF-4.
The tornado that struck Pilger (the western twin) weakened shortly after crossing highway 275 and the condensation funnel completely lifted for several minutes while dust continued to whirl on the ground. At this time the Eastern twin was growing wider.
Condensation funnels started to drop from the western mesocyclone and twins were again on the ground growing in size and closer together. The eastern twin was arcing to the north while the western twin tracked more northeast. Their damage paths would eventually cross about 5 miles northeast of Pilger or 5 miles northwest of Wisner. From my perspective the twin tornadoes vanished behind a rainy mass and another mesocyclone would develop just to the east and drop the soon to be Wakefield EF-4 tornado.
Curtains of rain cleared in the rainy mass revealing a thick tube that would crawl easterly along or near the Wayne County line. This tornado became the rope satellite that would slingshot around the southern flank of the developing Wakefield tornado. The Wakefield tornado tracked almost due north and dissipated to the east of Wakefiled.
After the Wakefield tornado moved into the rain and dissipated, a new mesocyclone developed to the east or southeast continuing the double helix mesocyclone development pattern of the day. The storm was now thinning and displaying a long twisted updraft. This updraft would threaten with several bowl funnel clouds with weak rotation confirmed on the ground on two seperate occasions by storm chaser Aaron Rigsby before dropping the finally brief weak Hubbard "scuddy" tornado.
This storm weakened drastically as it crossed into Iowa near Sioux City.
more later...

High Noon at Winnetoon | Nebraska Stories

Step back in time to the Old West with a guided visit to the Winnetoon boardwalk, complete with historical buildings and artifacts, a trading post and a garden of native wild flowers and prairie grasses. For more NebraskaStories, visit http://www.netnebraska.org/nebraskastories.

Thanks for watching....
Burlington Station (Omaha, Nebraska)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burlington_Station_(Omaha,_Nebraska)
Florence Depot
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florence_Depot
Omaha Quartermaster Depot
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omaha_Quartermaster_Depot_Historic_District
Union Station (Omaha)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_Station_(Omaha)
Webster Street Station
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Webster_Street_Station
Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Defunct_railway_stations_in_Omaha,_Nebraska
Music: Cry,VibeTracks; YouTube AudioLibraryGhost stations is the usual English translation for the German word Geisterbahnhöfe. This term was used to describe certain stations on Berlin's U-Bahn and S-Bahn metro networks that were closed during the period of Berlin's division during the Cold War. Since then, the term has come to be used to describe any disused station on an underground railway line, especially those actively passed through by passenger trains.
An abandoned (or disused) railway station is a building or structure which was constructed to serve as a railway station but has fallen into disuse. There are various circumstances when this may occur - a railway company may fall bankrupt, or the station may be closed due to the failure of economic activitiy such as insufficient passenger numbers, operational reasons such as the diversion or replacement of the line. In some instances, the railway line may continue in operation while the station is closed. Additionally, stations may sometimes be resited along the route of the line to new premises - examples of this include opening a replacement station nearer to the centre of population, or building a larger station on a less restricted site to cope with high passenger numbers.
Notable cases where railway stations have fallen into disuse include the Beeching Axe, a 1960s programme of mass closures of unprofitable railway lines by the British Government. The LondonUnderground system is also noted for its list of closed stations. During the time of the Berlin Wall, a number of Berlin U-Bahn stations on West Berlin lines became "ghost stations" (Geisterbahnhöfe) because they were on lines which passed through East Berlin territory.
Railway stations and lines which fall into disuse may become overgrown. Some former railway lines are repurposed as managed nature reserves, trails or other tourist attractions - for example Hellfire Pass, the route of the former "Death Railway" in Thailand. Many former railways are converted into long-distance cycleways, such as large sections of the National Cycle Network in the United Kingdom. In rural areas, former railway station buildings are often converted into private residences. Examples include many of the stations on the closed Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway in England.
Architecturally and historically notable station buildings may present a problem if they are protected under building preservation laws but fall into disuse. Such buildings are often simply demolished (such as Broad Street railway station (London); a similar fate threatens Michigan Central Station), or they may be preserved as part of a heritage railway. Often, in order to be retained as commercially viable structures within an urban environment, or as part of an urban regeneration project, they may be repurposed for alternative activities. Prominent examples include the ornate Gare d'Orsay in Paris, France, which was converted into the Musée d'Orsay art gallery; and Manchester Central railway station which was put to new use first as a car park, and later refurbished as the Manchester CentralConference Centre. The Ottawa Convention Centre is a former station, as are railway museums MemoryJunction in Brighton and Railway Museum of Eastern Ontario in Smiths Falls. In Prescott the rail station houses historical society offices; in Lac-Mégantic and Kingston a former station houses a tourism information office. Stations have also been transformed into restaurants or private residences.
Many abandoned railway stations and line are now being brought back into operational service, notably in the UK where environmental policy is driving the reversal of some of the Beeching closures of the 1960s. In London the Docklands Light Railway made use of disused railway infrastructure for much of its construction; in Manchester it is proposed to expand the Metrolink light rail system by re-opening abandoned rail lines; and in Scotland, the Scottish Government has plans to bring the Waverley Line back into passenger service.

1:13

22.5 - Tallest Building in Nebraska not in Lincoln or Omaha

22.5 - Tallest Building in Nebraska not in Lincoln or Omaha

22.5 - Tallest Building in Nebraska not in Lincoln or Omaha

We end famous buildings week with a quiz!

1:04

Wyoming/Nebraska Modular Education Buildings

Wyoming/Nebraska Modular Education Buildings

Wyoming/Nebraska Modular Education Buildings

http://www.satelliteco.com
Satellite Shelters ModularEducationBuildingsWhether you have a temporary or permanent space need, Modular Buildings are a great solution to the headaches of traditional construction. Benefits include: quicker time to occupancy, significant cost savings, and the flexibility to reconfigure the space as your needs change.
These buildings are coded for use in Wyoming and Nebraska only.
(#268074637-8, 268074643T-4T, 268074647T-8T)

Building implosion Cather & Pound University of Nebraska Lincoln

University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Cather and Pound halls tumbling down on December 22nd 2017 at 9 a.m. in a controlled demolition implosion.
A nine-square-block perimeter allowed only members of the implosion team. People could remain indoors within a second perimeter of 16 square blocks and this video was taken from within 2 blocks of the building from one of the closet public locations.
Demolition starts at 0:42 and you can see a flash in the base just before the first explosion.

1:45

DEADLY TORNADO NEBRASKA BUILDINGS FLYING THRU THE AIR

DEADLY TORNADO NEBRASKA BUILDINGS FLYING THRU THE AIR

DEADLY TORNADO NEBRASKA BUILDINGS FLYING THRU THE AIR

6:16

BARE USA Urban Exploration in Omaha NE | Abandoned places in Nebraska

BARE USA Urban Exploration in Omaha NE | Abandoned places in Nebraska

BARE USA Urban Exploration in Omaha NE | Abandoned places in Nebraska

Visithttp://BARE-USA.com
BARE USA is a nation wide photography project that contrast natural beauty with man-made decay. This contrast is achieved by photographing nude models in abandoned locations.
Join me as BARE USA engages in Urban Exploration in Omaha NE. In this episode explore some abandoned places in Nebraska the second stop on the BARE USA photography tour. The search proved to be difficult but eventually lead me to a location just right for the BARE USA project.
Skip to the parts YOU want to see by clicking on the time below
0:28 Abandoned train bridge and tower
1:42 Abandoned farm house
3:10 Abandoned house
4:45 Abandoned brick buildings
See the final result of the shoot @ http://bare-usa.com/old-house-on-route-66/
If you like this video please don't forget to share it, give it a thumbs up, comment below and subscribe to my channel! Thank you for your support!

University Of Nebraska Implodes 2 Buildings

12/22/17 Implosion of Cather and Pound Halls at the University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Both 13 story buildings were imploded at exactly 9am and fell onto the grounds formerly containing the Cather/Pound/Neihardt Dining Hall.

published: 22 Dec 2017

University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Cather & Pound Demolition

The University of Nebraska-Lincoln imploded their Cather and Pound dorm buildings at 9am on December 22nd, 2017. The connected dining hall between the twin buildings was torn down in October and its open space provided a prime spot for the dorms to fall. The University hopes to build more dorm buildings to replace the ones torn down, but for now will create a temporary green space once the rubble is removed. For more information on the demolition and on the history of Cather and Pound, visit the links below.
https://housing.unl.edu/cather-pound-demolition
https://unlincoln.exposure.co/historic-towers
This video was recorded on an iPad Pro and belongs to the creator of this channel.

published: 22 Dec 2017

NEBCO Inc. - Building Nebraska

NEBCO, Inc. has been part of Nebraska and the regions history for over a century. NEBCO traces its roots to Abel Construction Company, founded in 1908 by George P. Abel, Sr. Today, NEBCO is a third generation, family-owned and operated business. With over 1,000 employees, NEBCO has grown to become one of Nebraskas largest privately owned firms.
NEBCOs operations span the state of Nebraska and supply the construction industry with the materials needed to construct buildings, streets and highways. The companys business interests also include mining, highway and road construction, finance, real estate recreation development, agriculture, transportation, railroading and warehousing.
As Nebraska has grown in the last century, so has NEBCO, building Nebraska into areas of concrete and ...

published: 03 Mar 2010

Historic Bale Buildings of Nebraska

Meadville A Nebraska Ghost Town

Discover the scenic side of life at http://Ydstoti.com - MeadvilleGhost Town We were excited to see a ghost town listed near our backroads route in north central Nebraska. Our AAA map listed it under "Historic." The map showed the ghost town of Meadville located on the Niobrara River, but no road to the north; we decided to embark on a bit of a side-trip adventure anyway. We're always up for that! After a few miles of gravel road and some beautiful fall foliage, we crossed a brand new bridge -- which was a pleasant surprise since our map didn't show that detail.
About a half mile further, we located the "historic ghost town." The General Store is open daily at noon. We were there mid-morning so there was no one around. Meadville's main building is the Post Office/General Store which ...

A Drive Through Red Cloud, Nebraska

On our road trip in 2014, we had the pleasure of driving through the quaint little town of Red Cloud, Nebraska. The brick road through the downtown area was amazing, as well as the architecture of the buildings. We stopped for a bite of breakfast pizza while there! Residents of Red Cloud, you live in a beautiful place. To see thousands of pictures, more videos and tons of RV info, visit http://RVRoadTrip.us and http://JerryandCynthia.com

100 years of American industrial development included in one man's collection spread out in over 20 exhibit buildings. Planes, cars, appliances, collections, village buildings and their content, its all here. Come and enjoy.

published: 19 Sep 2017

DAY OF THE TWINS - Tornado terror in Nebraska

The Pilger Twin EF-4 tornadoes, The Wayne County line satellite and birth of the Wakefield EF-4 tornado. Full story w/ radar and commentary. To license HD tornado video contact hankschyma@yahoo.com
THE EVENT: June 16, 2014
Early this afternoon the Storm Prediction Center was monitoring a volatile atmosphere over Nebraska. By 2:34 PM satellite imagery revealed a lone thunderstorm developing in Boone, Platte and Madison counties and By 4PM a large damaging tornado was being reported near the town of Stanton. Base velocity started revealing a second area of powerful rotation within the storm. The Stanton tornado would earn an EF-4 rating before dissipating Near highway 57 and 275.
When I arrived at the scene, another tornado had developed southwest of Pilger, NE and strengthened t...

High Noon at Winnetoon | Nebraska Stories

Step back in time to the Old West with a guided visit to the Winnetoon boardwalk, complete with historical buildings and artifacts, a trading post and a garden of native wild flowers and prairie grasses. For more NebraskaStories, visit http://www.netnebraska.org/nebraskastories.

22.5 - Tallest Building in Nebraska not in Lincoln or Omaha

We end famous buildings week with a quiz!

published: 11 Sep 2017

Wyoming/Nebraska Modular Education Buildings

http://www.satelliteco.com
Satellite Shelters ModularEducationBuildingsWhether you have a temporary or permanent space need, Modular Buildings are a great solution to the headaches of traditional construction. Benefits include: quicker time to occupancy, significant cost savings, and the flexibility to reconfigure the space as your needs change.
These buildings are coded for use in Wyoming and Nebraska only.
(#268074637-8, 268074643T-4T, 268074647T-8T)

Building implosion Cather & Pound University of Nebraska Lincoln

University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Cather and Pound halls tumbling down on December 22nd 2017 at 9 a.m. in a controlled demolition implosion.
A nine-square-block perimeter allowed only members of the implosion team. People could remain indoors within a second perimeter of 16 square blocks and this video was taken from within 2 blocks of the building from one of the closet public locations.
Demolition starts at 0:42 and you can see a flash in the base just before the first explosion.

published: 22 Dec 2017

DEADLY TORNADO NEBRASKA BUILDINGS FLYING THRU THE AIR

published: 16 Oct 2015

BARE USA Urban Exploration in Omaha NE | Abandoned places in Nebraska

Visithttp://BARE-USA.com
BARE USA is a nation wide photography project that contrast natural beauty with man-made decay. This contrast is achieved by photographing nude models in abandoned locations.
Join me as BARE USA engages in Urban Exploration in Omaha NE. In this episode explore some abandoned places in Nebraska the second stop on the BARE USA photography tour. The search proved to be difficult but eventually lead me to a location just right for the BARE USA project.
Skip to the parts YOU want to see by clicking on the time below
0:28 Abandoned train bridge and tower
1:42 Abandoned farm house
3:10 Abandoned house
4:45 Abandoned brick buildings
See the final result of the shoot @ http://bare-usa.com/old-house-on-route-66/
If you like this video please don't forget to share it...

12/22/17 Implosion of Cather and Pound Halls at the University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Both 13 story buildings were imploded at exactly 9am and fell onto the grounds formerly containing the Cather/Pound/Neihardt Dining Hall.

12/22/17 Implosion of Cather and Pound Halls at the University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Both 13 story buildings were imploded at exactly 9am and fell onto the grounds formerly containing the Cather/Pound/Neihardt Dining Hall.

The University of Nebraska-Lincoln imploded their Cather and Pound dorm buildings at 9am on December 22nd, 2017. The connected dining hall between the twin buildings was torn down in October and its open space provided a prime spot for the dorms to fall. The University hopes to build more dorm buildings to replace the ones torn down, but for now will create a temporary green space once the rubble is removed. For more information on the demolition and on the history of Cather and Pound, visit the links below.
https://housing.unl.edu/cather-pound-demolition
https://unlincoln.exposure.co/historic-towers
This video was recorded on an iPad Pro and belongs to the creator of this channel.

The University of Nebraska-Lincoln imploded their Cather and Pound dorm buildings at 9am on December 22nd, 2017. The connected dining hall between the twin buildings was torn down in October and its open space provided a prime spot for the dorms to fall. The University hopes to build more dorm buildings to replace the ones torn down, but for now will create a temporary green space once the rubble is removed. For more information on the demolition and on the history of Cather and Pound, visit the links below.
https://housing.unl.edu/cather-pound-demolition
https://unlincoln.exposure.co/historic-towers
This video was recorded on an iPad Pro and belongs to the creator of this channel.

NEBCO, Inc. has been part of Nebraska and the regions history for over a century. NEBCO traces its roots to Abel Construction Company, founded in 1908 by George P. Abel, Sr. Today, NEBCO is a third generation, family-owned and operated business. With over 1,000 employees, NEBCO has grown to become one of Nebraskas largest privately owned firms.
NEBCOs operations span the state of Nebraska and supply the construction industry with the materials needed to construct buildings, streets and highways. The companys business interests also include mining, highway and road construction, finance, real estate recreation development, agriculture, transportation, railroading and warehousing.
As Nebraska has grown in the last century, so has NEBCO, building Nebraska into areas of concrete and construction materials, real estate, recreation, and philanthropy.
http://www.nebcoinc.com
http://www.Abelfoundation.org
http://www.concreteindustries.com
http://www.christensenconcrete.com
http://www.constructorslincoln.com/
http://www.balanceisgood.com/
http://www.kearneycreteandblock.com/
http://www.readymixedconcrete.com/
http://www.kerfordlimestone.com/
http://www.nebcorealtygroup.com/
http://www.nebcointermodal.com/
http://www.nebraskaash.com/
http://www.olbrailway.com/
http://www.overlandsandandgravel.com/
http://www.plainspozzolanic.com/
http://www.quarryoaks.com
http://www.readymixedconcrete.com/
http://www.reimerskaufman.com/
http://www.saltdogs.com/
http://www.trafconinc.com/
http://www.umixproducts.com/
http://www.universalinland.com/
http://www.watkinsconcreteblock.com/
http://www.westernsandandgravel.com/

NEBCO, Inc. has been part of Nebraska and the regions history for over a century. NEBCO traces its roots to Abel Construction Company, founded in 1908 by George P. Abel, Sr. Today, NEBCO is a third generation, family-owned and operated business. With over 1,000 employees, NEBCO has grown to become one of Nebraskas largest privately owned firms.
NEBCOs operations span the state of Nebraska and supply the construction industry with the materials needed to construct buildings, streets and highways. The companys business interests also include mining, highway and road construction, finance, real estate recreation development, agriculture, transportation, railroading and warehousing.
As Nebraska has grown in the last century, so has NEBCO, building Nebraska into areas of concrete and construction materials, real estate, recreation, and philanthropy.
http://www.nebcoinc.com
http://www.Abelfoundation.org
http://www.concreteindustries.com
http://www.christensenconcrete.com
http://www.constructorslincoln.com/
http://www.balanceisgood.com/
http://www.kearneycreteandblock.com/
http://www.readymixedconcrete.com/
http://www.kerfordlimestone.com/
http://www.nebcorealtygroup.com/
http://www.nebcointermodal.com/
http://www.nebraskaash.com/
http://www.olbrailway.com/
http://www.overlandsandandgravel.com/
http://www.plainspozzolanic.com/
http://www.quarryoaks.com
http://www.readymixedconcrete.com/
http://www.reimerskaufman.com/
http://www.saltdogs.com/
http://www.trafconinc.com/
http://www.umixproducts.com/
http://www.universalinland.com/
http://www.watkinsconcreteblock.com/
http://www.westernsandandgravel.com/

Discover the scenic side of life at http://Ydstoti.com - MeadvilleGhost Town We were excited to see a ghost town listed near our backroads route in north central Nebraska. Our AAA map listed it under "Historic." The map showed the ghost town of Meadville located on the Niobrara River, but no road to the north; we decided to embark on a bit of a side-trip adventure anyway. We're always up for that! After a few miles of gravel road and some beautiful fall foliage, we crossed a brand new bridge -- which was a pleasant surprise since our map didn't show that detail.
About a half mile further, we located the "historic ghost town." The General Store is open daily at noon. We were there mid-morning so there was no one around. Meadville's main building is the Post Office/General Store which was restored 15 years ago. There are three other buildings on the property -- a storage building, a house that appears to have been moved in, and an authentic log cabin that seems to be original to the town.
A bit disappointing, but we didn't talk to anyone about the history so perhaps there is more than meets the eye or some grand plans in the works. It did look as though we missed quite a party -- there were beer bottles and bags -- and more bags -- of beer cans. Perhaps that is their fundraising method for future improvements!
For this backroads trip, however, we have to say it was not worth the trip. The only spirits we found evidence of are those that come in a brown bottle!

Discover the scenic side of life at http://Ydstoti.com - MeadvilleGhost Town We were excited to see a ghost town listed near our backroads route in north central Nebraska. Our AAA map listed it under "Historic." The map showed the ghost town of Meadville located on the Niobrara River, but no road to the north; we decided to embark on a bit of a side-trip adventure anyway. We're always up for that! After a few miles of gravel road and some beautiful fall foliage, we crossed a brand new bridge -- which was a pleasant surprise since our map didn't show that detail.
About a half mile further, we located the "historic ghost town." The General Store is open daily at noon. We were there mid-morning so there was no one around. Meadville's main building is the Post Office/General Store which was restored 15 years ago. There are three other buildings on the property -- a storage building, a house that appears to have been moved in, and an authentic log cabin that seems to be original to the town.
A bit disappointing, but we didn't talk to anyone about the history so perhaps there is more than meets the eye or some grand plans in the works. It did look as though we missed quite a party -- there were beer bottles and bags -- and more bags -- of beer cans. Perhaps that is their fundraising method for future improvements!
For this backroads trip, however, we have to say it was not worth the trip. The only spirits we found evidence of are those that come in a brown bottle!

A Drive Through Red Cloud, Nebraska

On our road trip in 2014, we had the pleasure of driving through the quaint little town of Red Cloud, Nebraska. The brick road through the downtown area was am...

On our road trip in 2014, we had the pleasure of driving through the quaint little town of Red Cloud, Nebraska. The brick road through the downtown area was amazing, as well as the architecture of the buildings. We stopped for a bite of breakfast pizza while there! Residents of Red Cloud, you live in a beautiful place. To see thousands of pictures, more videos and tons of RV info, visit http://RVRoadTrip.us and http://JerryandCynthia.com

On our road trip in 2014, we had the pleasure of driving through the quaint little town of Red Cloud, Nebraska. The brick road through the downtown area was amazing, as well as the architecture of the buildings. We stopped for a bite of breakfast pizza while there! Residents of Red Cloud, you live in a beautiful place. To see thousands of pictures, more videos and tons of RV info, visit http://RVRoadTrip.us and http://JerryandCynthia.com

100 years of American industrial development included in one man's collection spread out in over 20 exhibit buildings. Planes, cars, appliances, collections, vi...

100 years of American industrial development included in one man's collection spread out in over 20 exhibit buildings. Planes, cars, appliances, collections, village buildings and their content, its all here. Come and enjoy.

100 years of American industrial development included in one man's collection spread out in over 20 exhibit buildings. Planes, cars, appliances, collections, village buildings and their content, its all here. Come and enjoy.

DAY OF THE TWINS - Tornado terror in Nebraska

The Pilger Twin EF-4 tornadoes, The Wayne County line satellite and birth of the Wakefield EF-4 tornado. Full story w/ radar and commentary. To license HD torn...

The Pilger Twin EF-4 tornadoes, The Wayne County line satellite and birth of the Wakefield EF-4 tornado. Full story w/ radar and commentary. To license HD tornado video contact hankschyma@yahoo.com
THE EVENT: June 16, 2014
Early this afternoon the Storm Prediction Center was monitoring a volatile atmosphere over Nebraska. By 2:34 PM satellite imagery revealed a lone thunderstorm developing in Boone, Platte and Madison counties and By 4PM a large damaging tornado was being reported near the town of Stanton. Base velocity started revealing a second area of powerful rotation within the storm. The Stanton tornado would earn an EF-4 rating before dissipating Near highway 57 and 275.
When I arrived at the scene, another tornado had developed southwest of Pilger, NE and strengthened to EF-4 status while striking the small town killing 2 people and critically injuring around 20 others. During this time a 2nd tornado was developing to the southeast. This tornado would become the eastern twin and would also strengthen to an EF-4.
The tornado that struck Pilger (the western twin) weakened shortly after crossing highway 275 and the condensation funnel completely lifted for several minutes while dust continued to whirl on the ground. At this time the Eastern twin was growing wider.
Condensation funnels started to drop from the western mesocyclone and twins were again on the ground growing in size and closer together. The eastern twin was arcing to the north while the western twin tracked more northeast. Their damage paths would eventually cross about 5 miles northeast of Pilger or 5 miles northwest of Wisner. From my perspective the twin tornadoes vanished behind a rainy mass and another mesocyclone would develop just to the east and drop the soon to be Wakefield EF-4 tornado.
Curtains of rain cleared in the rainy mass revealing a thick tube that would crawl easterly along or near the Wayne County line. This tornado became the rope satellite that would slingshot around the southern flank of the developing Wakefield tornado. The Wakefield tornado tracked almost due north and dissipated to the east of Wakefiled.
After the Wakefield tornado moved into the rain and dissipated, a new mesocyclone developed to the east or southeast continuing the double helix mesocyclone development pattern of the day. The storm was now thinning and displaying a long twisted updraft. This updraft would threaten with several bowl funnel clouds with weak rotation confirmed on the ground on two seperate occasions by storm chaser Aaron Rigsby before dropping the finally brief weak Hubbard "scuddy" tornado.
This storm weakened drastically as it crossed into Iowa near Sioux City.
more later...

The Pilger Twin EF-4 tornadoes, The Wayne County line satellite and birth of the Wakefield EF-4 tornado. Full story w/ radar and commentary. To license HD tornado video contact hankschyma@yahoo.com
THE EVENT: June 16, 2014
Early this afternoon the Storm Prediction Center was monitoring a volatile atmosphere over Nebraska. By 2:34 PM satellite imagery revealed a lone thunderstorm developing in Boone, Platte and Madison counties and By 4PM a large damaging tornado was being reported near the town of Stanton. Base velocity started revealing a second area of powerful rotation within the storm. The Stanton tornado would earn an EF-4 rating before dissipating Near highway 57 and 275.
When I arrived at the scene, another tornado had developed southwest of Pilger, NE and strengthened to EF-4 status while striking the small town killing 2 people and critically injuring around 20 others. During this time a 2nd tornado was developing to the southeast. This tornado would become the eastern twin and would also strengthen to an EF-4.
The tornado that struck Pilger (the western twin) weakened shortly after crossing highway 275 and the condensation funnel completely lifted for several minutes while dust continued to whirl on the ground. At this time the Eastern twin was growing wider.
Condensation funnels started to drop from the western mesocyclone and twins were again on the ground growing in size and closer together. The eastern twin was arcing to the north while the western twin tracked more northeast. Their damage paths would eventually cross about 5 miles northeast of Pilger or 5 miles northwest of Wisner. From my perspective the twin tornadoes vanished behind a rainy mass and another mesocyclone would develop just to the east and drop the soon to be Wakefield EF-4 tornado.
Curtains of rain cleared in the rainy mass revealing a thick tube that would crawl easterly along or near the Wayne County line. This tornado became the rope satellite that would slingshot around the southern flank of the developing Wakefield tornado. The Wakefield tornado tracked almost due north and dissipated to the east of Wakefiled.
After the Wakefield tornado moved into the rain and dissipated, a new mesocyclone developed to the east or southeast continuing the double helix mesocyclone development pattern of the day. The storm was now thinning and displaying a long twisted updraft. This updraft would threaten with several bowl funnel clouds with weak rotation confirmed on the ground on two seperate occasions by storm chaser Aaron Rigsby before dropping the finally brief weak Hubbard "scuddy" tornado.
This storm weakened drastically as it crossed into Iowa near Sioux City.
more later...

High Noon at Winnetoon | Nebraska Stories

Step back in time to the Old West with a guided visit to the Winnetoon boardwalk, complete with historical buildings and artifacts, a trading post and a garden ...

Step back in time to the Old West with a guided visit to the Winnetoon boardwalk, complete with historical buildings and artifacts, a trading post and a garden of native wild flowers and prairie grasses. For more NebraskaStories, visit http://www.netnebraska.org/nebraskastories.

Step back in time to the Old West with a guided visit to the Winnetoon boardwalk, complete with historical buildings and artifacts, a trading post and a garden of native wild flowers and prairie grasses. For more NebraskaStories, visit http://www.netnebraska.org/nebraskastories.

Thanks for watching....
Burlington Station (Omaha, Nebraska)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burlington_Station_(Omaha,_Nebraska)
Florence Depot
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florence_Depot
Omaha Quartermaster Depot
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omaha_Quartermaster_Depot_Historic_District
Union Station (Omaha)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_Station_(Omaha)
Webster Street Station
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Webster_Street_Station
Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Defunct_railway_stations_in_Omaha,_Nebraska
Music: Cry,VibeTracks; YouTube AudioLibraryGhost stations is the usual English translation for the German word Geisterbahnhöfe. This term was used to describe certain stations on Berlin's U-Bahn and S-Bahn metro networks that were closed during the period of Berlin's division during the Cold War. Since then, the term has come to be used to describe any disused station on an underground railway line, especially those actively passed through by passenger trains.
An abandoned (or disused) railway station is a building or structure which was constructed to serve as a railway station but has fallen into disuse. There are various circumstances when this may occur - a railway company may fall bankrupt, or the station may be closed due to the failure of economic activitiy such as insufficient passenger numbers, operational reasons such as the diversion or replacement of the line. In some instances, the railway line may continue in operation while the station is closed. Additionally, stations may sometimes be resited along the route of the line to new premises - examples of this include opening a replacement station nearer to the centre of population, or building a larger station on a less restricted site to cope with high passenger numbers.
Notable cases where railway stations have fallen into disuse include the Beeching Axe, a 1960s programme of mass closures of unprofitable railway lines by the British Government. The LondonUnderground system is also noted for its list of closed stations. During the time of the Berlin Wall, a number of Berlin U-Bahn stations on West Berlin lines became "ghost stations" (Geisterbahnhöfe) because they were on lines which passed through East Berlin territory.
Railway stations and lines which fall into disuse may become overgrown. Some former railway lines are repurposed as managed nature reserves, trails or other tourist attractions - for example Hellfire Pass, the route of the former "Death Railway" in Thailand. Many former railways are converted into long-distance cycleways, such as large sections of the National Cycle Network in the United Kingdom. In rural areas, former railway station buildings are often converted into private residences. Examples include many of the stations on the closed Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway in England.
Architecturally and historically notable station buildings may present a problem if they are protected under building preservation laws but fall into disuse. Such buildings are often simply demolished (such as Broad Street railway station (London); a similar fate threatens Michigan Central Station), or they may be preserved as part of a heritage railway. Often, in order to be retained as commercially viable structures within an urban environment, or as part of an urban regeneration project, they may be repurposed for alternative activities. Prominent examples include the ornate Gare d'Orsay in Paris, France, which was converted into the Musée d'Orsay art gallery; and Manchester Central railway station which was put to new use first as a car park, and later refurbished as the Manchester CentralConference Centre. The Ottawa Convention Centre is a former station, as are railway museums MemoryJunction in Brighton and Railway Museum of Eastern Ontario in Smiths Falls. In Prescott the rail station houses historical society offices; in Lac-Mégantic and Kingston a former station houses a tourism information office. Stations have also been transformed into restaurants or private residences.
Many abandoned railway stations and line are now being brought back into operational service, notably in the UK where environmental policy is driving the reversal of some of the Beeching closures of the 1960s. In London the Docklands Light Railway made use of disused railway infrastructure for much of its construction; in Manchester it is proposed to expand the Metrolink light rail system by re-opening abandoned rail lines; and in Scotland, the Scottish Government has plans to bring the Waverley Line back into passenger service.

Thanks for watching....
Burlington Station (Omaha, Nebraska)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burlington_Station_(Omaha,_Nebraska)
Florence Depot
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florence_Depot
Omaha Quartermaster Depot
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omaha_Quartermaster_Depot_Historic_District
Union Station (Omaha)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_Station_(Omaha)
Webster Street Station
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Webster_Street_Station
Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Defunct_railway_stations_in_Omaha,_Nebraska
Music: Cry,VibeTracks; YouTube AudioLibraryGhost stations is the usual English translation for the German word Geisterbahnhöfe. This term was used to describe certain stations on Berlin's U-Bahn and S-Bahn metro networks that were closed during the period of Berlin's division during the Cold War. Since then, the term has come to be used to describe any disused station on an underground railway line, especially those actively passed through by passenger trains.
An abandoned (or disused) railway station is a building or structure which was constructed to serve as a railway station but has fallen into disuse. There are various circumstances when this may occur - a railway company may fall bankrupt, or the station may be closed due to the failure of economic activitiy such as insufficient passenger numbers, operational reasons such as the diversion or replacement of the line. In some instances, the railway line may continue in operation while the station is closed. Additionally, stations may sometimes be resited along the route of the line to new premises - examples of this include opening a replacement station nearer to the centre of population, or building a larger station on a less restricted site to cope with high passenger numbers.
Notable cases where railway stations have fallen into disuse include the Beeching Axe, a 1960s programme of mass closures of unprofitable railway lines by the British Government. The LondonUnderground system is also noted for its list of closed stations. During the time of the Berlin Wall, a number of Berlin U-Bahn stations on West Berlin lines became "ghost stations" (Geisterbahnhöfe) because they were on lines which passed through East Berlin territory.
Railway stations and lines which fall into disuse may become overgrown. Some former railway lines are repurposed as managed nature reserves, trails or other tourist attractions - for example Hellfire Pass, the route of the former "Death Railway" in Thailand. Many former railways are converted into long-distance cycleways, such as large sections of the National Cycle Network in the United Kingdom. In rural areas, former railway station buildings are often converted into private residences. Examples include many of the stations on the closed Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway in England.
Architecturally and historically notable station buildings may present a problem if they are protected under building preservation laws but fall into disuse. Such buildings are often simply demolished (such as Broad Street railway station (London); a similar fate threatens Michigan Central Station), or they may be preserved as part of a heritage railway. Often, in order to be retained as commercially viable structures within an urban environment, or as part of an urban regeneration project, they may be repurposed for alternative activities. Prominent examples include the ornate Gare d'Orsay in Paris, France, which was converted into the Musée d'Orsay art gallery; and Manchester Central railway station which was put to new use first as a car park, and later refurbished as the Manchester CentralConference Centre. The Ottawa Convention Centre is a former station, as are railway museums MemoryJunction in Brighton and Railway Museum of Eastern Ontario in Smiths Falls. In Prescott the rail station houses historical society offices; in Lac-Mégantic and Kingston a former station houses a tourism information office. Stations have also been transformed into restaurants or private residences.
Many abandoned railway stations and line are now being brought back into operational service, notably in the UK where environmental policy is driving the reversal of some of the Beeching closures of the 1960s. In London the Docklands Light Railway made use of disused railway infrastructure for much of its construction; in Manchester it is proposed to expand the Metrolink light rail system by re-opening abandoned rail lines; and in Scotland, the Scottish Government has plans to bring the Waverley Line back into passenger service.

http://www.satelliteco.com
Satellite Shelters ModularEducationBuildingsWhether you have a temporary or permanent space need, Modular Buildings are a great solution to the headaches of traditional construction. Benefits include: quicker time to occupancy, significant cost savings, and the flexibility to reconfigure the space as your needs change.
These buildings are coded for use in Wyoming and Nebraska only.
(#268074637-8, 268074643T-4T, 268074647T-8T)

http://www.satelliteco.com
Satellite Shelters ModularEducationBuildingsWhether you have a temporary or permanent space need, Modular Buildings are a great solution to the headaches of traditional construction. Benefits include: quicker time to occupancy, significant cost savings, and the flexibility to reconfigure the space as your needs change.
These buildings are coded for use in Wyoming and Nebraska only.
(#268074637-8, 268074643T-4T, 268074647T-8T)

University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Cather and Pound halls tumbling down on December 22nd 2017 at 9 a.m. in a controlled demolition implosion.
A nine-square-block perimeter allowed only members of the implosion team. People could remain indoors within a second perimeter of 16 square blocks and this video was taken from within 2 blocks of the building from one of the closet public locations.
Demolition starts at 0:42 and you can see a flash in the base just before the first explosion.

University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Cather and Pound halls tumbling down on December 22nd 2017 at 9 a.m. in a controlled demolition implosion.
A nine-square-block perimeter allowed only members of the implosion team. People could remain indoors within a second perimeter of 16 square blocks and this video was taken from within 2 blocks of the building from one of the closet public locations.
Demolition starts at 0:42 and you can see a flash in the base just before the first explosion.

BARE USA Urban Exploration in Omaha NE | Abandoned places in Nebraska

Visithttp://BARE-USA.com
BARE USA is a nation wide photography project that contrast natural beauty with man-made decay. This contrast is achieved by photogr...

Visithttp://BARE-USA.com
BARE USA is a nation wide photography project that contrast natural beauty with man-made decay. This contrast is achieved by photographing nude models in abandoned locations.
Join me as BARE USA engages in Urban Exploration in Omaha NE. In this episode explore some abandoned places in Nebraska the second stop on the BARE USA photography tour. The search proved to be difficult but eventually lead me to a location just right for the BARE USA project.
Skip to the parts YOU want to see by clicking on the time below
0:28 Abandoned train bridge and tower
1:42 Abandoned farm house
3:10 Abandoned house
4:45 Abandoned brick buildings
See the final result of the shoot @ http://bare-usa.com/old-house-on-route-66/
If you like this video please don't forget to share it, give it a thumbs up, comment below and subscribe to my channel! Thank you for your support!

Visithttp://BARE-USA.com
BARE USA is a nation wide photography project that contrast natural beauty with man-made decay. This contrast is achieved by photographing nude models in abandoned locations.
Join me as BARE USA engages in Urban Exploration in Omaha NE. In this episode explore some abandoned places in Nebraska the second stop on the BARE USA photography tour. The search proved to be difficult but eventually lead me to a location just right for the BARE USA project.
Skip to the parts YOU want to see by clicking on the time below
0:28 Abandoned train bridge and tower
1:42 Abandoned farm house
3:10 Abandoned house
4:45 Abandoned brick buildings
See the final result of the shoot @ http://bare-usa.com/old-house-on-route-66/
If you like this video please don't forget to share it, give it a thumbs up, comment below and subscribe to my channel! Thank you for your support!

10 Best Travel Destinations in Nebraska USA

BestPlacesChannel | Nebraska Top and Best Destinations.
Vist our website: http://bestlocations.weebly.com/
Visit our FacebookPage: https://www.facebook.com/BestLocationstoVisit/
Places to visit in 2017.
Top Destinations in Nebraska.
Amazing Destinations in Nebraska.
Best places to visit in Nebraska.
TravelGuide.
Travel Destinations 2017.
Travel Destinations in Summer.
Summer Destinations.
Best places to visit in Nebraska.
Top 10 place in Nebraska.
Top 10 place to visit in Nebraska.
TouristSpots in Nebraska.
Nebraska Tourist Spots.
Nebraska Tourist Destinations.
Must see places in Nebraska.
Places to go to in Nebraska.
Things to do in Nebraska.
Nebraska Travel Guide.
Amazing places in Nebraska.
Places to visit in January.
Places to visit in February.
Places to visit in March.
Places ...

Nebraska From Above - Best Highlights Montage (HD)

Short highlights of Skyworks aerial filming of Nebraska. You can see more about our experiences on this shoot as well as the route we flew at http://www.skyworkshd.com/above-nebraska We filmed some 35 hours of HD video of Nebraska from the air - although sometimes we were only a couple of feet off the ground.
Subscribe at http://www.youtube.com/user/worldfromaboveHD?sub_confirmation=1

Nebraska From Above - Best Highlights Montage (HD)

Short highlights of Skyworks aerial filming of Nebraska. You can see more about our experiences on this shoot as well as the route we flew at http://www.skywork...

Short highlights of Skyworks aerial filming of Nebraska. You can see more about our experiences on this shoot as well as the route we flew at http://www.skyworkshd.com/above-nebraska We filmed some 35 hours of HD video of Nebraska from the air - although sometimes we were only a couple of feet off the ground.
Subscribe at http://www.youtube.com/user/worldfromaboveHD?sub_confirmation=1

Short highlights of Skyworks aerial filming of Nebraska. You can see more about our experiences on this shoot as well as the route we flew at http://www.skyworkshd.com/above-nebraska We filmed some 35 hours of HD video of Nebraska from the air - although sometimes we were only a couple of feet off the ground.
Subscribe at http://www.youtube.com/user/worldfromaboveHD?sub_confirmation=1

George W. Norris - The Man by Linda Hein

Behind The Scenes At Antiques Roadshow Omaha

Go behind-the-scenes of Antiques Roadshow (PBS) with NET Television during the Roadshow's recent Omaha taping and visit The Sutton House (McCook) to learn the story behind Roadshow Exec. ProducerMarsha Bemko's favorite 2004 Nebraska appraisal.
During Antiques Roadshow’s return visit to Omaha, NET Television was given a backstage pass to record a behind-the-scenes documentary on the popular PBS series. Taped over the course of two days, NET had complete access to the Roadshow crew, appraisers, and guests. See what it takes to make America’s original treasure hunting show. Then, get an update on Executive Producer Marsh Bemko’s favorite appraisal from the Roadshow’s first visit to Omaha in 2004. When Patty Cordell and her sister, StephanieHurst, brought their family heirlooms for ap...

published: 10 Jan 2017

building of a railroad in Godmanchester huntingdon 2015

Ancient Structures Discovered on Mars That are Beyond Our Comprehension

A vast underground city full of enormous structures and devices has been discovered on Mars. Images show tunnel systems, temples and ruins. This video reveals the many unusual geographical anomalies on the Martian surface appear to be evidence of a once ancient civilisation that may have lived on the red giant. So what’s going on here? Are we to believe that NASA had no previous inkling of these anomalous terrain features
The photographic evidence suggests Pyramids and ancient artifacts on the surface of Mars. Studying Martian images for anomalies you will uncovering so many things that are not rocks and according to scientists, do not belong on Mars. While the Mars anomalies research has been largely condemned by NASA scientists, have they really known about this evidence all along?

published: 09 Sep 2017

Why is the Capitol of Nebraska Named Lincoln?, and Other Questions about Nebraska's Capitol

Go behind-the-scenes of Antiques Roadshow (PBS) with NET Television during the Roadshow's recent Omaha taping and visit The Sutton House (McCook) to learn the story behind Roadshow Exec. ProducerMarsha Bemko's favorite 2004 Nebraska appraisal.
During Antiques Roadshow’s return visit to Omaha, NET Television was given a backstage pass to record a behind-the-scenes documentary on the popular PBS series. Taped over the course of two days, NET had complete access to the Roadshow crew, appraisers, and guests. See what it takes to make America’s original treasure hunting show. Then, get an update on Executive Producer Marsh Bemko’s favorite appraisal from the Roadshow’s first visit to Omaha in 2004. When Patty Cordell and her sister, StephanieHurst, brought their family heirlooms for appraisal, they hoped but never dreamed they’d have an American treasure.

Go behind-the-scenes of Antiques Roadshow (PBS) with NET Television during the Roadshow's recent Omaha taping and visit The Sutton House (McCook) to learn the story behind Roadshow Exec. ProducerMarsha Bemko's favorite 2004 Nebraska appraisal.
During Antiques Roadshow’s return visit to Omaha, NET Television was given a backstage pass to record a behind-the-scenes documentary on the popular PBS series. Taped over the course of two days, NET had complete access to the Roadshow crew, appraisers, and guests. See what it takes to make America’s original treasure hunting show. Then, get an update on Executive Producer Marsh Bemko’s favorite appraisal from the Roadshow’s first visit to Omaha in 2004. When Patty Cordell and her sister, StephanieHurst, brought their family heirlooms for appraisal, they hoped but never dreamed they’d have an American treasure.

Ancient Structures Discovered on Mars That are Beyond Our Comprehension

A vast underground city full of enormous structures and devices has been discovered on Mars. Images show tunnel systems, temples and ruins. This video reveals t...

A vast underground city full of enormous structures and devices has been discovered on Mars. Images show tunnel systems, temples and ruins. This video reveals the many unusual geographical anomalies on the Martian surface appear to be evidence of a once ancient civilisation that may have lived on the red giant. So what’s going on here? Are we to believe that NASA had no previous inkling of these anomalous terrain features
The photographic evidence suggests Pyramids and ancient artifacts on the surface of Mars. Studying Martian images for anomalies you will uncovering so many things that are not rocks and according to scientists, do not belong on Mars. While the Mars anomalies research has been largely condemned by NASA scientists, have they really known about this evidence all along?

A vast underground city full of enormous structures and devices has been discovered on Mars. Images show tunnel systems, temples and ruins. This video reveals the many unusual geographical anomalies on the Martian surface appear to be evidence of a once ancient civilisation that may have lived on the red giant. So what’s going on here? Are we to believe that NASA had no previous inkling of these anomalous terrain features
The photographic evidence suggests Pyramids and ancient artifacts on the surface of Mars. Studying Martian images for anomalies you will uncovering so many things that are not rocks and according to scientists, do not belong on Mars. While the Mars anomalies research has been largely condemned by NASA scientists, have they really known about this evidence all along?

published:09 Sep 2017

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Why is the Capitol of Nebraska Named Lincoln?, and Other Questions about Nebraska's Capitol

12/22/17 Implosion of Cather and Pound Halls at the University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Both 13 story buildings were imploded at exactly 9am and fell onto the grounds formerly containing the Cather/Pound/Neihardt Dining Hall.

2:20

University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Cather & Pound Demolition

The University of Nebraska-Lincoln imploded their Cather and Pound dorm buildings at 9am o...

University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Cather & Pound Demolition

The University of Nebraska-Lincoln imploded their Cather and Pound dorm buildings at 9am on December 22nd, 2017. The connected dining hall between the twin buildings was torn down in October and its open space provided a prime spot for the dorms to fall. The University hopes to build more dorm buildings to replace the ones torn down, but for now will create a temporary green space once the rubble is removed. For more information on the demolition and on the history of Cather and Pound, visit the links below.
https://housing.unl.edu/cather-pound-demolition
https://unlincoln.exposure.co/historic-towers
This video was recorded on an iPad Pro and belongs to the creator of this channel.

9:26

NEBCO Inc. - Building Nebraska

NEBCO, Inc. has been part of Nebraska and the regions history for over a century. NEBCO t...

NEBCO Inc. - Building Nebraska

NEBCO, Inc. has been part of Nebraska and the regions history for over a century. NEBCO traces its roots to Abel Construction Company, founded in 1908 by George P. Abel, Sr. Today, NEBCO is a third generation, family-owned and operated business. With over 1,000 employees, NEBCO has grown to become one of Nebraskas largest privately owned firms.
NEBCOs operations span the state of Nebraska and supply the construction industry with the materials needed to construct buildings, streets and highways. The companys business interests also include mining, highway and road construction, finance, real estate recreation development, agriculture, transportation, railroading and warehousing.
As Nebraska has grown in the last century, so has NEBCO, building Nebraska into areas of concrete and construction materials, real estate, recreation, and philanthropy.
http://www.nebcoinc.com
http://www.Abelfoundation.org
http://www.concreteindustries.com
http://www.christensenconcrete.com
http://www.constructorslincoln.com/
http://www.balanceisgood.com/
http://www.kearneycreteandblock.com/
http://www.readymixedconcrete.com/
http://www.kerfordlimestone.com/
http://www.nebcorealtygroup.com/
http://www.nebcointermodal.com/
http://www.nebraskaash.com/
http://www.olbrailway.com/
http://www.overlandsandandgravel.com/
http://www.plainspozzolanic.com/
http://www.quarryoaks.com
http://www.readymixedconcrete.com/
http://www.reimerskaufman.com/
http://www.saltdogs.com/
http://www.trafconinc.com/
http://www.umixproducts.com/
http://www.universalinland.com/
http://www.watkinsconcreteblock.com/
http://www.westernsandandgravel.com/

Meadville A Nebraska Ghost Town

Discover the scenic side of life at http://Ydstoti.com - MeadvilleGhost Town We were excited to see a ghost town listed near our backroads route in north central Nebraska. Our AAA map listed it under "Historic." The map showed the ghost town of Meadville located on the Niobrara River, but no road to the north; we decided to embark on a bit of a side-trip adventure anyway. We're always up for that! After a few miles of gravel road and some beautiful fall foliage, we crossed a brand new bridge -- which was a pleasant surprise since our map didn't show that detail.
About a half mile further, we located the "historic ghost town." The General Store is open daily at noon. We were there mid-morning so there was no one around. Meadville's main building is the Post Office/General Store which was restored 15 years ago. There are three other buildings on the property -- a storage building, a house that appears to have been moved in, and an authentic log cabin that seems to be original to the town.
A bit disappointing, but we didn't talk to anyone about the history so perhaps there is more than meets the eye or some grand plans in the works. It did look as though we missed quite a party -- there were beer bottles and bags -- and more bags -- of beer cans. Perhaps that is their fundraising method for future improvements!
For this backroads trip, however, we have to say it was not worth the trip. The only spirits we found evidence of are those that come in a brown bottle!

2:39

Demolition of the Cather-Pound dorm buildings

Demolition of the Cather-Pound dorms on the University of Nebraska city campus, December 2...

A Drive Through Red Cloud, Nebraska

On our road trip in 2014, we had the pleasure of driving through the quaint little town of Red Cloud, Nebraska. The brick road through the downtown area was amazing, as well as the architecture of the buildings. We stopped for a bite of breakfast pizza while there! Residents of Red Cloud, you live in a beautiful place. To see thousands of pictures, more videos and tons of RV info, visit http://RVRoadTrip.us and http://JerryandCynthia.com

15:21

History in Review: 150 Years of Nebraska

The newest season of History in Review takes a look back at the early days of the State of...

100 years of American industrial development included in one man's collection spread out in over 20 exhibit buildings. Planes, cars, appliances, collections, village buildings and their content, its all here. Come and enjoy.

10:54

DAY OF THE TWINS - Tornado terror in Nebraska

The Pilger Twin EF-4 tornadoes, The Wayne County line satellite and birth of the Wakefield...

DAY OF THE TWINS - Tornado terror in Nebraska

The Pilger Twin EF-4 tornadoes, The Wayne County line satellite and birth of the Wakefield EF-4 tornado. Full story w/ radar and commentary. To license HD tornado video contact hankschyma@yahoo.com
THE EVENT: June 16, 2014
Early this afternoon the Storm Prediction Center was monitoring a volatile atmosphere over Nebraska. By 2:34 PM satellite imagery revealed a lone thunderstorm developing in Boone, Platte and Madison counties and By 4PM a large damaging tornado was being reported near the town of Stanton. Base velocity started revealing a second area of powerful rotation within the storm. The Stanton tornado would earn an EF-4 rating before dissipating Near highway 57 and 275.
When I arrived at the scene, another tornado had developed southwest of Pilger, NE and strengthened to EF-4 status while striking the small town killing 2 people and critically injuring around 20 others. During this time a 2nd tornado was developing to the southeast. This tornado would become the eastern twin and would also strengthen to an EF-4.
The tornado that struck Pilger (the western twin) weakened shortly after crossing highway 275 and the condensation funnel completely lifted for several minutes while dust continued to whirl on the ground. At this time the Eastern twin was growing wider.
Condensation funnels started to drop from the western mesocyclone and twins were again on the ground growing in size and closer together. The eastern twin was arcing to the north while the western twin tracked more northeast. Their damage paths would eventually cross about 5 miles northeast of Pilger or 5 miles northwest of Wisner. From my perspective the twin tornadoes vanished behind a rainy mass and another mesocyclone would develop just to the east and drop the soon to be Wakefield EF-4 tornado.
Curtains of rain cleared in the rainy mass revealing a thick tube that would crawl easterly along or near the Wayne County line. This tornado became the rope satellite that would slingshot around the southern flank of the developing Wakefield tornado. The Wakefield tornado tracked almost due north and dissipated to the east of Wakefiled.
After the Wakefield tornado moved into the rain and dissipated, a new mesocyclone developed to the east or southeast continuing the double helix mesocyclone development pattern of the day. The storm was now thinning and displaying a long twisted updraft. This updraft would threaten with several bowl funnel clouds with weak rotation confirmed on the ground on two seperate occasions by storm chaser Aaron Rigsby before dropping the finally brief weak Hubbard "scuddy" tornado.
This storm weakened drastically as it crossed into Iowa near Sioux City.
more later...

3:46

Tour of the Under-Construction Nebraska Building

We got a sneak peek at the inside of the still-under-construction Nebraska Building at the...

Nebraska From Above - Best Highlights Montage (HD)

Short highlights of Skyworks aerial filming of Nebraska. You can see more about our experiences on this shoot as well as the route we flew at http://www.skyworkshd.com/above-nebraska We filmed some 35 hours of HD video of Nebraska from the air - although sometimes we were only a couple of feet off the ground.
Subscribe at http://www.youtube.com/user/worldfromaboveHD?sub_confirmation=1

9:30

Travel Nebraska HD - YouTube

Nebraska as a travel destination? You bet...
music by Terrafusion 06 - Forge City

Behind The Scenes At Antiques Roadshow Omaha

Go behind-the-scenes of Antiques Roadshow (PBS) with NET Television during the Roadshow's recent Omaha taping and visit The Sutton House (McCook) to learn the story behind Roadshow Exec. ProducerMarsha Bemko's favorite 2004 Nebraska appraisal.
During Antiques Roadshow’s return visit to Omaha, NET Television was given a backstage pass to record a behind-the-scenes documentary on the popular PBS series. Taped over the course of two days, NET had complete access to the Roadshow crew, appraisers, and guests. See what it takes to make America’s original treasure hunting show. Then, get an update on Executive Producer Marsh Bemko’s favorite appraisal from the Roadshow’s first visit to Omaha in 2004. When Patty Cordell and her sister, StephanieHurst, brought their family heirlooms for appraisal, they hoped but never dreamed they’d have an American treasure.

Ancient Structures Discovered on Mars That are Beyond Our Comprehension

A vast underground city full of enormous structures and devices has been discovered on Mars. Images show tunnel systems, temples and ruins. This video reveals the many unusual geographical anomalies on the Martian surface appear to be evidence of a once ancient civilisation that may have lived on the red giant. So what’s going on here? Are we to believe that NASA had no previous inkling of these anomalous terrain features
The photographic evidence suggests Pyramids and ancient artifacts on the surface of Mars. Studying Martian images for anomalies you will uncovering so many things that are not rocks and according to scientists, do not belong on Mars. While the Mars anomalies research has been largely condemned by NASA scientists, have they really known about this evidence all along?

1:01:08

Why is the Capitol of Nebraska Named Lincoln?, and Other Questions about Nebraska's Capitol

Why is the Capitol of Nebraska Named Lincoln?, and Other Questions about Nebraska's Capito...